Don Brown is the author of Thunder in the Morning Calm, The Malacca Conspiracy, The Navy Justice Series and Black Sea Affair, a submarine thriller that predicted the 2008 shooting war between Russia and Georgia. Don served five years in the U.S. Navy as an officer in the Judge Advocate General's (JAG) Corps, which gave him an exceptional vantage point into both the Navy and the inner workings of "inside-the-beltway" as an action officer assigned to the pentagon. He left active duty in 1992 to pursue private practice, but remained on inactive status through 1999, rising to the rank of Lieutenant Commander. He and his family live in North Carol
★ "Brown applies his signature graphic-nonfiction approach to
the rescue of Jewish young people from the
Holocaust. Sequences about broader historical events set the
scene before Brown turns focus to individual human stories, showing
poignant moments as parents and children say what may be final
goodbyes. Striking." — Horn Book (starred review)
"A powerful account focusing on the fates of Jewish children during
the Holocaust. Vivid, devastating, and impressively
documented." — Kirkus Reviews
"Brown (83 Days in Mariupol) chronicles standout stories of
children who managed to escape harrowing circumstances during the
Holocaust in this hard-hitting graphic novel. Though Brown
does not shy away from the reality that more than a million
children died, through these true and deftly told experiences, he
offers hope amid the devastation."
— Publishers Weekly
"Devastating. With illustrations that are at times tender and other
times gruesome, Brown has found a way to convey the destruction of
the Holocaust to younger readers. Add this graphic novel to
your list of resources for teaching and learning about the
Holocaust." — School Library Journal
"This indelible graphic perspective grimly etches a crucial
acknowledgment of the Holocaust’s harrowing toll on humanity’s
youngest and most vulnerable."
— Booklist
"While the narrative boxes throughout convey pertinent information,
dialogue bubbles and slightly skewed, unsettling art layer in
elements of emotional urgency and intimate heartbreak. The
unfortunate parallels to the kidnappings in Ukraine and the family
separations at the U.S. southern border offer timely sparks for
discussion." — Bulletin of the Center for Children’s Books
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